Abstract

Phosphorus (P) accumulation in croplands resulting from ever-increasing input of P fertilizer strongly influences soil microbial growth and activities, which is expected to alter the soil priming effect (PE) induced by plant residue. However, the effect of P availability on the magnitude and direction of PE remains largely unexplored and the underlying microbial mechanisms are still unclear. Therefore, a 40-day incubation experiment was established by adding C4-maize straw to C3-soils with or without long-term P fertilizer inputs to investigate PE and accompanied dynamics of microbiota. The results revealed that in both soils, straw application caused positive real PEs via a "microbial co-metabolism" mechanism, accompanied by a microbial succession from the dominance of r- and K-strategists to K-strategists (mainly fungi). In addition, long-term amendment with P increased PE by 83.2% compared with no P fertilization control, which was mainly mediated by K-strategists, especially the fungal families Chaetomiaceae and Myrmecridiaceae. The increased PE was accompanied by enhanced microbial biomass carbon, extracellular enzyme activities, and bacterial gene abundance, confirming the "stoichiometric decomposition" theory. Meanwhile, deviating from the conventional paradigm, higher phosphatase activity and lower enzymatic stoichiometry of carbon (C)-to-P ratios in high-P soil compared with that in low-P soil suggested stronger "P mining" with high-P availability.

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